Re: Request for Argentina fans planning to travel to Davis Cup final 2006 in Moscow

Quote:

Originally Posted by hernangumy

Hola Topsy, te escribo en ingles porque no hablo espanol muy bien.

I sent a mail to ticket@russport.ru for a 2nd category ticket for my father (i could have press accreditation). They answer doing availability for A-15 sector, 2800 rublos (less of 100 euro) for 3 days, and sent me an application form for tickets booking with credit card.
What do you think about?

sorry , what do you put in the mail , but I am send two mail , and anybody answer,
please put the same that you put in your mail
thanks very much

Re: Request for Argentina fans planning to travel to Davis Cup final 2006 in Moscow

Hi Tutef,
I booked 3 tickets for my father on A-15 sector.
I had a thick mail exchange with Elena Chubarova (regina.tuzovskaya@russport.ru) for 4-5 days.
I simply requested tickets of 1st category, but she only offered 2nd category, and I accepted.
I send by fax a copy of my credit card and they taked money that day.
I can retire tickets to their office at Olympic Stadium...

Sorry for you, but I suspect that missed answer is for unavailable tickets...
Try to send a mail to Regina Tuzovskaya...

David Nalbandian will lead Argentina's quest to capture its first Davis Cup championship in history. Argentine captain Alberto Mancini has reconvened the same cast — Nalbandian, Jose Acasuso, Agustin Calleri and Juan Ignacio Chela — that crushed visiting Australia, 5-0, in the Davis Cup semifinals for the December 1-3 Davis Cup final against Russia.

The tie will be staged on a carpet court inside Moscow's Olympic Stadium.

Russian captain Shamil Tarpischev has not yet announced his lineup, but he is expected to name third-ranked Nikolay Davydenko, 22nd-ranked Dmitry Tursunov and former World No. 1 Marat Safin as his primary players along with Igor Andreev, who could join the team to replace the injured Mikhail Youzhny.

Nalbandian, who will likely play No. 1 singles for Argentina, is 4-2 lifetime against Davydenko, including three straight wins over the U.S. Open semifinalist. The 33rd-ranked Chela, a strong candidate for the second singles spot, has dominated Davydenko in posting a 5-0 career record against the Russian. Chela is 6-4 lifetime in Davis Cup competition with his last loss coming to Safin in the 2002 Davis Cup semifinals staged on carpet in Moscow. Russia beat Argentina 3-2 en route to its first Davis Cup crown in history. Chela defeated Mikhail Youzhny in the dead rubber of that semifinal setback.

Davydenko is 2-0 against Acasuso, with both matches contested on clay. The Paris Masters champion is 4-0 against Calleri, including a 6-4, 6-3 triumph in the New Haven final in August. Davydenko has not dropped a set to Calleri in four meetings.

The 26th-ranked Safin is the key player in Russia's hopes of claiming its second Davis Cup championship. Safin, who has won nine of his last 11 Davis Cup matches, has beaten Nalbandian in six of their eight meetings and despite his lower ranking, he would be favored over the Argentine in that match. Safin has won three of four meetings with Chela though they have not met in two years; the two-time Grand Slam champion is 1-2 against Acasuso, scoring a 7-6(5), 6-7(4), 6-3 victory in Madrid last month.

Guillermo Canas, who was sidelined for 15 months after doping charges (Canas denied the charges and was ultimately reinstated), has been selected as a reserve on the Argentine team.

This will be the third occasion that Olympic Stadium has staged the Davis Cup final, following consecutive finals in 1994 and 1995. Russia suffered defeat in both of those finals, before capturing its first Davis Cup title with a 3-2 victory over France in Paris in 2002 as Mikhail Youzhny rallied from a two-set deficit to clinch the Cup.